![]() ![]() ![]() Clicking the icon will take you to the new XAML Binding Failures window. This icon will turn red if at least one binding failure is detected and hovering your mouse over the icon will show you the total number of failures in the tooltip. New XAML Binding failure indicator icon in the in-app toolbar for WPF and UWP applications.This feature is implemented as a combination of two improvements: Our biggest feature in this release is a new experience designed to make it easier for developers to detect when bindings have failed in their running application and easily see the details of the failure in a dedicated window. You can try these features by downloading the preview of Visual Studio 2019 here (it installs side-by-side with your release version too!), and continue to read below for all the details and instructions on how to enable some of these features – after the preview is installed. Two preview features that are still in early development including a new XAML Designer feature called Suggested Actions and our new and improved designer preview for WPF.A built-in inline color visualizer in the XAML Code editor.A new XAML data binding failure troubleshooting experience – now you can see when bindings have failed and review the details in a new dedicated tool window.In this preview release of Visual Studio, we are shipping multiple new features that we hope you will try, including: What’s New in Visual Studio 2019 version 16.7 Preview 1 In this blog post we will focus on what’s new in the most recent release of Visual Studio 2019 version 16.7 Preview 1 and also highlight other features released in versions 16.5 and 16.6 including improvements to XAML live debugging tools, XAML Hot Reload, XAML designer, code editor, packaging and extensibility. This blog post is similar to our update back in December 2019, so if you missed that post I recommend giving it a read as well. ![]() Given this week’s many new and exciting releases at Microsoft Build 2020 I want to take this opportunity to recap what’s new for those building WPF or UWP applications, and where applicable, Xamarin.Forms. Hello once again from the XAML tooling team in Visual Studio. ![]()
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